Court Calls Out BS ‘Driving While Black’ Traffic Stops While Tossing Felony Possession Conviction

from the another-pretext-vanishes-under-scrutiny dept

While it’s not ultimately a factor in the court’s decision, it’s nice to see a court call out biased policing while discussing the merits of the case. This decision [PDF], handed down by an Illinois state appellate court, makes it pretty clear the court believes this stop would never had happened if the driver happened to be white. (via FourthAmendment.com)

It’s futile to believe biased policing isn’t the norm in the United States. There’s simply too much data to dispute. In this decision, even more data is presented that makes it clear “driving while black” (DWB) is considered reasonable suspicion for a traffic stop and, often, a vehicle search by far too many US law enforcement officers.

This one starts with a pretext: a minor traffic violation three officers hoped to convert into a search of the vehicle the black man was driving.

Deshaun Carpenter was driving an “older model” Dodge Nitro with one broken taillight and a small object suspended from the rearview mirror when three officers curbed the car, ordered Carpenter out, and asked whether “narcotics” or “weapons” were in the vehicle.

As courts have often noted in cases like these, any pretext will do as long as the pretext holds up. In this case, it didn’t. As soon as the officers were questioned in court during the trial, the pretext fell apart.

An officer admitted on cross-examination that a single broken taillight was not a lawful basis for a stop.

There goes that pretext. The officers had a backup plan, though. It was the “small object suspended from the rearview mirror.” And that form of obstructed driving might have held up under cross-examination… if the officers had bothered to mention this alleged moving violation once during 20 minute traffic stop and vehicle search.

And in the body-camera footage, officers never mention the obstruction hanging from the rearview mirror.

Both pretexts were invalidated by an officer’s admission and the officers’ complete disinterest in this supposed issue during the traffic stop.

After taking Carpenter out of the car, officers peppered him with questions about drugs and weapons. Carpenter insisted he had borrowed the car from a friend of his girlfriend. Unhappy with the lack of immediate findings, officers spent the next thirteen minutes searching the car. A gun was found embedded between the metal frame and the cushioning of the drivers seat, which led to felony possession charges for Carpenter, as he was forbidden to possess a handgun due to a previous felony conviction.

Here’s where officers found the weapon they insisted Carpenter must have known about:

Carpenter first moved to have the evidence suppressed as the fruits of an unconstitutional search. That seemed to be the smart way to go but, for some reason, his lawyer decided it wasn’t and withdrew the motion. A bench trial ended with a conviction, leaving Carpenter with the sole option of arguing the state did not provide enough evidence to support his unlawful possession charge.

One of the two officers involved in the stop and search (Lt. Piechocki) claimed reasonable suspicion to further the search was due to the fact that Carpenter “kept looking” at the cops (Officer Pizzo and Officer Brienzo) as they searched the car. He also claimed the fact that Carpenter “kept looking through the back window” suggested Carpenter knew there was something illegal in the car.

The court says these assertions are, at best, laughable. First, Lt. Piechocki had ordered Carpenter to turn around and face the back of the car, making it inevitable that he would “[look] through the back window.” Second, the court notes it’s perfectly natural for drivers to watch officers search their cars. That’s just a thing people do.

In reaching this conclusion, we reject the State’s contention that “ample grounds” permitted
the trier of fact to infer that Carpenter knew about the embedded handgun. The State speaks of Carpenter’s “nervous conduct in three times looking through the rear window as the officers searched the front seat[ ] and the fact that the seat [Carpenter] was sitting on contained an abnormal rip and a hard object which was later revealed to be a firearm.” But we review all the evidence, not some. Common sense informs us that anyone stopped by three officers might appear nervous to an officer. Moreover, who would not look through the rear window to see what the officers were doing?

Indeed, the officers had ordered Carpenter to stand facing the rear window while they searched the car and him. Contrary to the dissent’s incorrect claim, we do not assert the officers ordered Carpenter to look through the window—the officers ordered Carpenter to face the rear window. Thus, Carpenter’s looking complied with the officer’s orders. To equate cooperation with consciousness of guilt assumes wrongdoing regardless of what happened. Moreover, compliance meant nothing to Piechocki, who had fixed in his mind the conclusion the dissent reaches: Carpenter must know a handgun is in the car, which is a preconceived notion and not a reason, a pernicious presumption and not a rational inference.

The fact that a gun was (very eventually) discovered under the driver’s seat does not mean Carpenter knew it was there or that it was his. Nothing in the case tied him to possession of the vehicle, one he steadily maintained he had borrowed. Even the cops who spent thirteen minutes in the front of the car failed to detect it while sitting in the driver’s seat.

And that’s where the court drops a pretty fucking great cite, mocking the officers for their testimony that Carpenter must have been able to detect the hidden object even when it took them nearly 15 minutes to discover the gun themselves.

Finally, although the State describes a driver’s seat with a slight rip as “abnormal,” nothing in the record supports that assessment. On the contrary, Piechocki agreed that the car appeared to be “an older model,” and Pizzo and Brienzo sat on the rip and never noticed it. As for Carpenter sitting on a “hard object,” two trained officers did too and never reported feeling a “hard object.”
Nor does the record support that, unlike Pizzo and Brienzo, Carpenter would more likely feel the presence of a hard object. Cf. Hans Christian Andersen, The Princess on the Pea, in Fairy Tales and Stories 24, 24-25 (Signe Toksvig ed., 1921)
[…] That evidence relates to an inference about Carpenter’s knowledge. But, as two trained officers did not feel the presence of the handgun under the seat, nothing in the record supports a reasonable inference that Carpenter would have sensed it.

I love it! One can only imagine the reactions of the officers when this decision hit their desks.

Having dispensed with this so-called evidence of a crime, the court says the conviction cannot stand. Nothing connects Carpenter to the gun it took officers 13 minutes to discover in a car Carpenter had borrowed from a friend of a friend.

But before it arrives at this conclusion, it does the equally important work of pointing out this stop likely never would have happened if the driver had been white. And the court has receipts. (All emphasis mine.)

What is known as “driving while Black” (DWB) is a pernicious reality that corrodes trust in law enforcement and the legal system. DWB involves police using “stereotypical thinking and hunches” and “dubious investigative techniques” in traffic stops. Commonwealth v. Feyenord, 833 N.E.2d 590, 604 (Mass. 2005) (Greany, J., concurring). Numerous studies have extensively documented the unsettling reality of DWB. See Emma Pierson et al., A Large-Scale Analysis of Racial Disparities in Police Stops Across the United States, 4 Nature Hum. Behav. 736 (2020),
https://5harad.com/papers/100M-stops.pdf [https://perma.cc/2Y9S-VLFA] (analyzing nearly 100 million stops across nation between 2011 and 2018 and finding Black drivers were less likely to be stopped after sunset when “veil of darkness” masked race); Ill. Dep’t of Transp., Illinois Traffic and Pedestrian Stop Study 2022 Annual Report: Pedestrian Stop Analysis 18-19 (2023), https://idot.illinois.gov/content/dam/soi/en/web/idot/documents/transportation-system/reports/safety/traffic-stop-studies/final–part-i-executive-summary-pedestrian-6-30-23.pdf [https://perma.cc/ZUE8-2TFR] (racial profiling possible factor in traffic stops); see also Pascal Sabino, Cops Rarely Pull Over Drivers In Their Own Neighborhoods, Data Shows. Motorists In Black Neighborhoods Aren’t So Lucky, Block Club Chi. (Oct. 27, 2021), https://blockclubchicago.org [https://perma.cc/PHC2-JEMD] (mapping all 327,224 traffic stops by Chicago police in 2020 and finding “tremendous bulk of drivers” stopped in neighborhoods on the South and West sides and “few drivers” stopped in mostly white neighborhoods on North Side).

[…]

Addressing the specter of DWB is crucial to the dismantling of this systemic injustice. Several essential indicators of DWB are laid bare by the evidence, including (i) minor infractions as a pretext for investigating unrelated suspicions; (ii) stereotypes or assumptions about race based on police conduct or statements during the stop; (iii) prolonged detention inconsistent with the nature of the stop; (iv) a search without proper justification, usually based on stereotypes rather than reasonable suspicion, (v) unequal enforcement, such as pulling over a person of color, for a violation seldom of consequence in a white neighborhood; (vi) targeting neighborhoods or areas predominately populated by people of color; and (vii) use of disrespectful behavior, aggression, or excessive force by police. Individually or together, the elements do not indicate or imply racial bias, and most police officers strive to act properly and respectfully. Nevertheless, the more indicators, the more likely the stop was for DWB.

Judges ensure that the law is fairly and consistently applied to all. The dissent’s critique that “this issue [(DWB)] was never raised by Carpenter” repudiates the long-standing appellate
court commitment to upholding the rule of law by exercising its authority. Relatedly, despite our discussing DWB generally and not on the merits, the dissent curiously treats our observations as an adjudication.
[…] In our view, abstaining from saying anything about DWB, which our dissenting colleague urges us to do, condones the officer’s actions here and continues to normalize a practice that exposure, not silence, will eliminate.

The dissent is disingenuous. As noted here, the dissent treats the majority’s raising of biased policing as a basis for its finding the state did not have enough evidence to prosecute the unlawful possession charge. But the majority simply points out this stop would likely never have happened if the driver were white, given that neither pretext for the stop justified the stop.

Second, the dissent surely knows raising claims about racial bias are far more likely to occur during civil litigation. During criminal trials, it’s extremely rare for a defendant to raise the issue of biased policing because it’s usually not germane to discussions about probable cause (for suppression requests) or other challenges of evidence. This is simply a judge pretending they don’t know how the system works so they can side with officers who used two deficient pretexts to engage in the warrantless search of a car — a fishing expedition that managed to result in a “catch” after 13 minutes of rooting around in the vehicle.

It’s a minor decision that sets no precedent. But it’s an important one that shows this appellate court is unwilling to give cops a pass just because they can find a pretext for a stop. Pretexts have to hold up under scrutiny and these didn’t. And the officers’ own recordings undermined their desperate attempts to turn normal driver behavior into something suspicious enough to justify everything they did after pulling over someone for failing to be white while operating a vehicle.

Filed Under: , , ,

Rate this comment as insightful
Rate this comment as funny
You have rated this comment as insightful
You have rated this comment as funny
Flag this comment as abusive/trolling/spam
You have flagged this comment
The first word has already been claimed
The last word has already been claimed
Insightful Lightbulb icon Funny Laughing icon Abusive/trolling/spam Flag icon Insightful badge Lightbulb icon Funny badge Laughing icon Comments icon

Comments on “Court Calls Out BS ‘Driving While Black’ Traffic Stops While Tossing Felony Possession Conviction”

Subscribe: RSS Leave a comment
24 Comments
This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

reasonable suspicion

Yeah, there’s this bit, too. It has to be a suspicion of something in particular, and be reasonable. Just saying “reasonable suspicion” as a magical incantation means jack shit, even if the unfortunate reality is that this BS flies most all the time.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
Anonymous Coward says:

Re:

“Reasonable suspicion” is a particularly galling thing when you consider that in the eyes of law enforcement, anything could be considered suspicious. Even the act of not being suspicious is considered suspicious, because it suggests that you have something to hide and are good at it.

Then there’s the fact that it takes the cops 15 minutes to find a concealed weapon. Really speaks volumes about the quality that davec’s boys will admit into their ranks.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

This comment has been deemed insightful by the community.
MrWilson (profile) says:

Re:

“Black people” is an arbitrary human grouping that isn’t a homogenous genetic group or the result of a scientific taxonomy, so making any broad claims about the genetics of black people is inherently flawed. Some people of various African ethnic groups are genetically closer to Europeans than to other African populations, so you’re grouping together disparate groups of people based on skin color, which doesn’t indicate a genetic relationship to each other.

IQ tests don’t test for all forms of intelligence, so they aren’t some universal test of intelligence or some other valuable trait. Using it as a yardstick for the value of human beings is myopic. Being intelligent isn’t a guarantee of contributing to the betterment of society or being happy or productive or kind. And many people overestimate their intelligence (like you). And environmental factors tend to play a more significant role in IQ than genetics.

There isn’t a criminality gene. There has been research into genes that correlate to (but don’t prove causation with) greater tendency towards violence, but studies on the topic indicate environmental factors such as how an individual was treated as a child (i.e. non-genetic factors) increase the likelihood of violence. Like all continuing research topics, there isn’t a consensus and drawing conclusions based on it at this stage is premature and typically only done by self-serving interests who are trying to push a bias (like you).

Recycling NAZI pseudo-science to try to make yourself feel better about how mediocre your life is by denigrating other people isn’t something an intelligent person would feel the need to do.

Sorry/Not sorry.

This comment has been flagged by the community. Click here to show it.

Anonymous Coward says:

You never know what is on your devices

That is why when when I go to Disneyland, knotts or SeaWorld, I wipe my devices and reinstall because I am travelling in the Constitution Free Zone so that if devices are ever confiscated any I don’t know about cannnot ever be recovered.

I also do this driving eithr to Canada’s wonderland or to the Calgary stampede so anything I am not aware of can never be recovered

There is no law anywhere in Canada or the United States that makes it a crime fur me to do that.

Wronski Feint (profile) says:

Jobs for those superfluous princesses

Nor does the record support that, unlike Pizzo and Brienzo, Carpenter would more likely feel the presence of a hard object. Cf. Hans Christian Andersen, The Princess on the Pea . . .

Finally, princesses can be off the public purse with gainful employment. While engaged in a traffic stop, police could request a sitter princess to attend and sit on car seats to detect illicit items.

dickeyrat says:

Why dya’ think some of us in the Old School STILL call them PIGS?? It’s a decent catchall for overpaid grown-up playground bullies who get to wear cool uniforms and talk all kinds of codes and numbers on that 2-way Raydio thangie that actually rests on their Shoulders! – while keeping the White Race safe, and keeping “them people” from ravaging and running away with OUR wimmen!! Oink, Oink!! (And what yanks me is how the entire community shuts down for a whole afternoon for a six-mile long mournful procession, every time one of them is physically blown away, usually due to his own stupidity. If you don’t wanna get shot on the job, then go get work as a fucking Milkman, for fuck’s sake! Chances are you’ll still get to wear a uniform!)

Lostin lodos says:

Wow, ignore the criminal

one broken taillight

Crime

object suspended from the rearview mirror

Crime

narcotics” or “weapons” were in the vehicle

Generally proper procedure in most countries.

was not a lawful basis for a stop

Officer is incorrect by state law

which led to felony possession charges for Carpenter

The driver was in possession… period

unconstitutional search

He broke two laws already!!

A bench trial ended with a (legally proper) conviction

All the nonsense aside, today the courts push a black/brown privilege. If your of Africa decent, you are clearly a martyr despite your clear criminal actions.

MrWilson (profile) says:

Re:

one broken taillight

Crime

Traffic violations aren’t classified as crimes. Crimes are misdemeanors and felonies. Traffic violations are usually just fineable offenses. Traffic violations aren’t usually arrestable offenses.

object suspended from the rearview mirror

Crime

Also not a crime and only a traffic violation in the state of Illinois when the object “materially obstructs” the view. While this stop occurred earlier, as of 2024, this is no longer a basis for a lawful stop in the state.

which led to felony possession charges for Carpenter

The driver was in possession… period

If the stop is unlawful, then the 4th Amendment would preclude a search. Your period is a violation of due process of law.

unconstitutional search

He broke two laws already!!

Traffic violations that don’t rise to the level of a misdemeanor and aren’t the bases for a lawful stop and search are protected by the constitution. Even people breaking the law have due process rights.

All the nonsense aside, today the courts push a black/brown privilege. If your of Africa decent, you are clearly a martyr despite your clear criminal actions.

Not only are you incredibly racist, but you’re also incredibly wrong, as usual.

The due process and constitutional rights enjoyed by this individual are also enjoyed by you. You should want them to have these rights because it means your rights will likewise be upheld. But you’re just a racist who loves a good opportunity to display your ignorance and sense of privilege.

Leave a Reply to Anonymous Coward Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Have a BestNetTech Account? Sign in now. Want one? Register here

Comment Options:

Make this the or (get credits or sign in to see balance) what's this?

What's this?

BestNetTech community members with BestNetTech Credits can spotlight a comment as either the "First Word" or "Last Word" on a particular comment thread. Credits can be purchased at the BestNetTech Insider Shop »

Follow BestNetTech

BestNetTech Daily Newsletter

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Get all our posts in your inbox with the BestNetTech Daily Newsletter!

We don’t spam. Read our privacy policy for more info.

Ctrl-Alt-Speech

A weekly news podcast from
Mike Masnick & Ben Whitelaw

Subscribe now to Ctrl-Alt-Speech »
BestNetTech Deals
BestNetTech Insider Discord
The latest chatter on the BestNetTech Insider Discord channel...
Loading...